The thought of someone killing them self in a misguided
and always useless act, is hard for most minds to contemplate. It is
never an act of bravery. Unlike a soldier who falls on a grenade or
charges a machine gun nest to save his fellows, the suicide bomber is a fool
and a loser. There is a special, hotter place in hell for those who
recruit such fools. The only heroes of such an attack are the ones who
die in their cross hairs, or have to live with the picture
forever.

WARNING: many of these stories are violent and
graphic. They are not intended to sensationalize, but rather to reveal
the depth of sacrifice, and the debt we owe.

The Armed Guard suffered more causalities in World War II than any other
Navy unit. There were the men who manned the guns on our Merchant
ships. Fred Peoples found himself in a harbor at Okinawa, on a ship
loaded with dynamite. The loudspeakers suddenly called the ships and
shore batteries to general quarters "Suicide planes!". There
were only two things Fred could do, and he did them both with all of his
might:

Gene Hostetter was on board the USS Mahon which was linked in life and death
to the USS Ward. The Ward fired the first shot of the Pacific battle
on December 7, 1941 when it sank a Japanese mini-sub just off of Pearl
Harbor. The Mahon was on patrol with the Ward on that day. On
December 7, 1944 the Mahon and Ward were off Leyte when Kamikazes sank them
both. In this narrative Gene tells us of the death of the USS Mahon,
and a few specific Heroes as well.

Bob Long saw first hand the sadism of the Japanese war machine in the Philippines.
Sgt. Long witnessed whole villages of Philippinos hacked to death with boa
knives. No one was spared regardless of age or gender. Mr. Long can also testify to the gruesome death of
Kamikaze pilots who gave up
and tried to fly back to the base. Like I said above, there's a
special place in hell for those with no soul.